In April 2016, American photojournalist Sarah Blesener traveled to Russia to see it for herself.

"My first shot there was these kids in complete full-body biohazard suits," she said, describing a visit to a public school offering military courses where young students could be seen loading and unloading AK-47s.

"Because youth are easy targets for new ideologies," Blesener later wrote, "I have [focused] my work on clubs, camps, and alternative youth groups that combine patriotic education and gun training with a mix of fun that makes the whole experience seem like a game."

Blesener found not only a fervent youthful patriotism that sometimes bordered on nationalism, but also kids just being kids. That became the driving narrative of her series, Toy Soldiers.

Blesener has a delicately cinematic touch. Her camera lens works from behind or above — looking beyond the incongruousness of kids carrying automatic weapons — sneaking up on those instances when the young soldiers dissolve into a fit of giggles.

"I wanted to find those moments that speak to the poetics of youth, identity, adolescence, and community," she said.

As one of three 2017-2018 recipients of the inaugural Catchlight Fellowship, a $30,000 grant to further photography for social good, Blesener will now turn her camera on her home country. This year, she is traveling all over the U.S. to show that Russia's patriotic phenomena isn't an isolated trend.

"I'm looking at the breeding grounds of patriotic youth," she said, including the ROTC, Young Marines, and military summer camps. "The rhetoric is similar to Russia and the growing popularity of these clubs is similar, although it's probably more prevalent in Russia. But even visually it looks similar."

One difference so far is that it has been harder to gain access to the American groups. "There's this distrust with the media here," she said. Still, Blesener is taking advantage of the current climate, which has given her long-held fascination with youth culture and politics a new potency. "How youth are identifying as patriotic will determine a lot of the future trajectory of where our country is going."